In re the Estate of Stevens

23 P. 379, 83 Cal. 322, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 685
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1890
DocketNo. 13381
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 23 P. 379 (In re the Estate of Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Estate of Stevens, 23 P. 379, 83 Cal. 322, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 685 (Cal. 1890).

Opinion

Thornton, J.

— Appeal by executrix, Lydia M. Stevens, from a judgment settling her accounts as executrix of the above-named decedent.

The appellant is the widow of the testator. The testator died on the 11th of February, 1888, and she was appointed and qualified as executrix of the last will of the testator on the 17th of March following. The testator was for man)>r years prior to his death in the employment of the Southern Pacific Company as its general master-mechanic, at a salary of five hundred dollars per month. He had drawn his salary for the month of January, 1888, and his full salary for the month of February was paid in the usual mode, without any deduction on account of his death on the eleventh day of that month. On the 17th of June, 1888, the sum of one thousand dollars was paid Mrs. Stevens by the company. On application of May S. Hubbard, Mrs. Stevens was charged with this sum as part of the estate of her testator. This is assigned here as error.

On consideration of the evidence, we are of the opinion that the point is well taken. It was paid to Mrs. Stevens on a voucher, of which the following is a copy:—

[324]*324“Southern Pacific Company,
“San Francisco, June 7, 1888. “To Mrs. A. J. Stevens,' Dr.
“For amount allowed, which would equal the salary of the late A. J. Stevens, Esq., for the months of March and April, 1888, two months, at five hundred dollars,— one thousand dollars.
“San Francisco, June 11, 1888.
“Received from Southern Pacific Company one thousand dollars in full for above account.
[Signed] “Mrs. A. J. Stevens.”
There are several indorsements in this paper; among others, these: “Name, Mrs. A. J. Stevens”; “ For allowance.”

The language of the voucher indicates, unmistakably, an allowance by the company. There was no obligation on the company to pay it. It was clearly a gift by the company. The allowance is clearly to Mrs. Stevens. The language used is, “To Mrs. A. J. Stevens, Dr.”; not to Mrs. Stevens, executrix, or as executrix of her deceased husband. It does not purport to be for salary. The amount is fixed by the salary which the testator would have earned had his services continued during the months named in the voucher. The salary is referred to for the sole purpose of fixing the amount.

We see nothing in the other evidence changing this purport of the voucher. It is all consistent with the fact that the allowance or gift was made to Mrs. Stevens personally, and this, we think, the evidence clearly shows. It was intended by the company as a grateful recognition of the services of one who had served it long and faithfully, to whom its representatives had no doubt been strongly attached, and was with great propriety made to the one of all the world who most felt his loss.

It makes no difference that Mrs. Stevens did not know whether it was a gift to her or not. It was all the more [325]*325gracefully done in that the fact that it was a gift was veiled from her. It was made to her in the mode employed that she might feel no embarrassment in accepting it. It thus shocked no feeling of the recipient, and the gift was enhanced in her estimation when she regarded it as a tribute to the worth of one who had for long been to her the cherished object of honorable pride- and devoted affection.

The intent of the donor to make a gift to Mrs. Stevens is that which is the most to he regarded, within the rule, Gujus est dare, ejus est disponere. The giver of a gift has the right to regulate its disposal (Broom’s Legal Maxims, 444); a fortiori has he a right to designate the donee. Of the intent of the donor here, we think there can he no doubt.

We think the court erred in charging Mrs. Stevens with this sum.

In fixing the allowance to the widow, the sum of two hundred dollars a month for twelve months was designated.

It appears from the bill of exceptions that Mrs. Stevens lived in a hired house, for which she paid the monthly rent of fifty-five dollars, and that sha had, during the period for which this allowance was made, rented out rooms in the house, for which she received the sum of three hundred dollars.

With this last sum she was charged as executrix by the court below.

It is urged that this charge was erroneous, and we are of that opinion.

The widow is entitled to a reasonable provision for her support, to be allowed by the superior court, or a judge thereof. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1464.) In making this allowance the court must take into consideration all the circumstances bearing upon the reasonableness of the amojmt to be .allowed. No doubt this was done in this case. The court is not restricted in making [326]*326this allowance to a bare support of the widow. Regard should be had, and no doubt was had, to the mode in which she lived during the lifetime of her husband. Such regard should be had in a case like this, when it appeared without doubt that the estate was amply sufficient to páy the amount allowed. We say no doubt this was done when the court originally determined what the allowance should be. It appears further, from this bill of exceptions, that, on the hearing at which this allowance was made, the court, among other things, heard and considered evidence to the effect that the rental of the house which was being paid by the executrix was the same paid by the deceased husband in his lifetime, and that the rooms were rented by the executrix during the time she was receiving this allowance.

The court, having considered all these facts, made the order of allowance.

Why should not this order be held final, unless facts not disclosed to the court when the order was made subsequently are brought to the attention of the court? The order is appealable (Code Oiv. Proc.,sec. 963, subd.3), and we are of opinion it should be regarded as final. On an appeal from the order of allowance, all these facts could have been brought to the attention of this court, the ruling reviewed, and the error, if any, corrected. The time for appeal was allowed to pass, and under such circumstances the power of the court over its order is at an end. The court below cannot sit as an appellate court to review its own orders.

It may be that if it had appeared that the court below had been imposed on by a studied withholding of material facts bearing on the subject-matter of inquiry, the court might deal with the order, and change it so as to make it conformable to what would have been a fair determination on the facts withheld being made to appear. But there is no such case before us; „all the facts on which the court acted were before it when it first acted. [327]*327Under these circumstances, we think the charge which involved a change in the order should not have been made.

We add, nor do these facts show that the order of allowance when originally made was not reasonable. It was none the less reasonable because the widow elected to deprive herself of comforts or conveniences to which she was entitled, and in the exercise of a judicious and commendable frugality have incremented her income by hiring to others some of her income.

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Bluebook (online)
23 P. 379, 83 Cal. 322, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-stevens-cal-1890.